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Collage of four photos. Clockwise from top left: 12th century church of Saint Edmund, Egleton; 16th century Brooke Priory Dovecote, glimpsed across a rolling green field; close up the leaves of one of four young ginkgo biloba trees planted in the village of Langham; 12th century church of Saint Peter, Brooke.

Collage of four photos. Clockwise from top left: 12th century church of Saint Edmund, Egleton; 16th century Brooke Priory Dovecote, glimpsed across a rolling green field; close up the leaves of one of four young ginkgo biloba trees planted in the village of Langham; 12th century church of Saint Peter, Brooke.

#ThursdayHike on Friday, 17.10.25: 6th and final leg of the #RutlandRound - also the longest at 15.25 miles. Whissendine to Belton, via Langham, Oakham and Braunstone. Overcast but dry, firm underfoot. One rabbit, two squirrels and lots of sheep.

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Collage of four photos. Clockwise from top left: 13th century stone bell tower of Holy Trinity Church, Teigh; 14th century stone bell tower of St Nicholas Church, Thisleton; unusual brick built pill box gun emplacement on Teigh Lane; field of sunflowers in Rutland.

Collage of four photos. Clockwise from top left: 13th century stone bell tower of Holy Trinity Church, Teigh; 14th century stone bell tower of St Nicholas Church, Thisleton; unusual brick built pill box gun emplacement on Teigh Lane; field of sunflowers in Rutland.

#ThursdayHike on Friday 10.10.25. Leg 5 of the #RutlandRound - Stretton to Whissendine via Thistleton and Teigh, 10.8 miles. Dry, overcast and breezy, firm underfoot. Red kites above our heads and acorns beneath our feet.

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Collage of three photos. Top: Saint Peter’s, Tickencote (originally Norman, rebuilt in the late 18th century). Bottom left: carved and painted wood ornamental village sign outside Empingham, depicting thatched cottages, a church spire and white dove, with a sail boat on Rutland Water in the background. Bottom right: in Stretton, a red telephone box (now housing a defibrillator) next to a tall cast iron village hand pump, painted green.

Collage of three photos. Top: Saint Peter’s, Tickencote (originally Norman, rebuilt in the late 18th century). Bottom left: carved and painted wood ornamental village sign outside Empingham, depicting thatched cottages, a church spire and white dove, with a sail boat on Rutland Water in the background. Bottom right: in Stretton, a red telephone box (now housing a defibrillator) next to a tall cast iron village hand pump, painted green.

Good afternoon! Our #ThursdayHike was leg 4 of the #RutlandRound - Empingham to Stretton via Tickencote, Great Casterton and Pickworth. Dry underfoot and mostly easygoing. Pheasants galore, gangs of blue tits in the hedgerows and a charm of goldfinches feeding on thistle seeds.

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Collage of four photos, taken on a sunny day with blue skies. Clockwise from top left: Saint Mary the Virgin, Ketton (14th century, central square tower and tall spire, 15th century chancel); Saint Peter’s, Empingham (14th century, tall square tower with short spire); Normanton Church (deconsecrated church originally built in 14th century, rebuilt in the Classical style in the 18th, saved when Rutland Water was created, located on a stone platform that projects into the reservoir); 15th century stone bridge over the River Welland at Duddington, with the old water mill in the background.

Collage of four photos, taken on a sunny day with blue skies. Clockwise from top left: Saint Mary the Virgin, Ketton (14th century, central square tower and tall spire, 15th century chancel); Saint Peter’s, Empingham (14th century, tall square tower with short spire); Normanton Church (deconsecrated church originally built in 14th century, rebuilt in the Classical style in the 18th, saved when Rutland Water was created, located on a stone platform that projects into the reservoir); 15th century stone bridge over the River Welland at Duddington, with the old water mill in the background.

Good afternoon! Our #ThursdayHike was leg 3 of the #RutlandRound - Duddington to Empingham via Ketton and Rutland Water, 10.3 miles. Breezy, sunny intervals, dry underfoot. Red kites, dragon flies and a grey heron.

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Collage of three photos. Top left: pyracantha overhanging a stone wall, so densely covered with small red berries that leaves and branches are completely hidden. Top right: in the foreground, a field of wildflowers including wild radish, fiddleneck, red clover and tree mallow. Centre right: ripe maize cob on the plant. Bottom: rear elevation of the Grade 1 listed medieval/Tudor Bede House in Lyddington.

Collage of three photos. Top left: pyracantha overhanging a stone wall, so densely covered with small red berries that leaves and branches are completely hidden. Top right: in the foreground, a field of wildflowers including wild radish, fiddleneck, red clover and tree mallow. Centre right: ripe maize cob on the plant. Bottom: rear elevation of the Grade 1 listed medieval/Tudor Bede House in Lyddington.

#ThursdayHike 18.9.25: leg 2 of the #RutlandRound. Lyddington to Duddington, 9.5 miles, firm underfoot, dry but incredibly humid. Berries in abundance and ripening maize.

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Collage of three photos of Rutland on a sunny day in September. Top: overlooking Eyebrook Reservoir, across recently ploughed fields. Bottom left: church of Saint Andrew, Stoke Dry. Bottom right: church of Saint Botolph, Wardley.

Collage of three photos of Rutland on a sunny day in September. Top: overlooking Eyebrook Reservoir, across recently ploughed fields. Bottom left: church of Saint Andrew, Stoke Dry. Bottom right: church of Saint Botolph, Wardley.

#ThursdayHike on a Friday: leg 1 of the #RutlandRound, Belton to Lyddington via Wardley, Uppingham, Stoke Dry and the Eyebrook Reservoir. 13 miles, firm underfoot. Hedgerows dripping with rosehips and berries; red kites overhead and hares in the field.

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